| Literature DB >> 29942662 |
Filippo de Marinis1, Fortunato Ciardiello2, Paul Baas3, Lucio Crinò4, Giuseppe Giaccone5, Francesco Grossi6, Matthew D Hellmann7, Tony S K Mok8, Hervè Lena9, Luis Paz-Ares10, Delvys Rodriguez-Abreu11, Joachim Von Pavel12, Cesare Gridelli13.
Abstract
Although lung cancer remains the leading cause of death from cancer worldwide, the advent of immunotherapy is changing the survival of patients affected by non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). A multitude of clinical trials are evaluating different immune checkpoints inhibitors in this new field of thoracic oncology. At the beginning of the immunotherapy era, nivolumab, pembrolizumab and atezolizumab showed high efficacy in patients with advanced NSCLC in second-line setting, receiving approvals for clinical practice. Nivolumab and atezolizumab are approved independently from programmed death lig and 1 (PD-L1) expression, while pembrolizumab is currently approved only for patients with PD-L1 expression ≥1%. The role of PD-L1 expression acquired more interest considering first-line clinical trials, in which the role of immunotherapy as monotherapy was confirmed only for pembrolizumab in patients with PD-L1 expression ≥50%. These data were analysed in this paper, focusing on the implications in clinical practice and how to use them to an accurate clinical benefit of patients with advanced NSCLC. We report a review based on a MEDLINE/PubMed, searched for randomised phase 2/3 trials evaluating immune checkpoint inhibitors and NSCLC, that moved to an approval from Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and European Medicine Agency (EMA). The evidence discussed in this manuscript and the final therapeutic algorithm, coming out from an International Experts Panel Meeting of the Italian Association of Thoracic Oncology.Entities:
Keywords: NSCLC; algorithm; atezolizumab; immunotherapy; nivolumab; pembrolizumab
Year: 2018 PMID: 29942662 PMCID: PMC6012561 DOI: 10.1136/esmoopen-2017-000298
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ESMO Open ISSN: 2059-7029
Activity of immune checkpoint inhibitor in second-line non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)
| Squamous NSCLC | ||||||
| Clinical trial | CheckMate 017 | KEYNOTE-010 | OAK | |||
| Drug | Nivolumab | Docetaxel | Pembolizumab* | Docetaxel | Atezolizumab | Docetaxel |
| No. of patients | 135 | 137 | 156 | 66 | 112 | 110 |
| m OS | 9.2 | 6.0 | NA | NA | 8.9 | 7.7 |
| HR | 0.62 (0.48–0.81) | 0.74 (0.50–1.09) | 0.73 (0.54–0.98) | |||
| 1-year overall survival (OS) (%) | 42 | 24 | 43/52** | 35 | 55§ | 41§ |
| 2-year OS (%) | 23 | 15 | 30.1a/ 37.5b§ | 14.5 | 31§ | 21§ |
| 3-year OS (%) | 16 | 6 | ||||
m OS, median overall survival.
Ongoing phase 3 trials of first-line treatment with immune checkpoint inhibitors
| Trial | Agent | Histology (SQ or no-SQ) | No. of patients | Experimental arm | PD-L1 status |
| CheckMate 227 | Nivolumab | Both | 1980 | Arm A: nivolumab. | All comers |
| KEYNOTE-042 | Pembrolizumab | Both | 1240 | Arm A: pembrolizumab. | Positive |
| KEYNOTE-407 | Pembrolizumab | SQ | 560 | Arm A: SOC. | All comers |
| KEYNOTE-189 | Pembrolizumab | No-SQ | 580 | Arm A: SOC. | All comers |
| NEPTUNE | Durvalumab | Both | 960 | Arm A: durvalumab+tremilimumab. | All comers |
| PEARL | Durvalumab | Both | 440 | Arm A: durvalumab. | Positive≥25% |
| IMpower 110 | Atezolizumab | Both | 570 | Arm A: SOC. | Positive |
| IMpower 130 | Atezolizumab | No-SQ | 650 | Arm A: SOC. | All comers |
| IMpower 131 | Atezolizumab | SQ | 1025 | Arm A: SOC. | All comers |
| IMpower 132 | Atezolizumab | No-SQ | 568 | Arm A: SOC. | All comers |
| IMpower 150 | Atezolizumab | No-SQ | 1200 | Arm A: SOC+bevacizumab. | All comers |
| JAVELIN LUNG 100 | Avelumab | Both | 1095 | Arm A: SOC. | Positive |
SOC, standard of care; SQ, sqamous.